'Social historian
Eva Swidler explores the radical potential of work resistance, explains how the labor movement of the 20th century traded the promise of way less working hours for slightly more wages (and why more radical unions in the future might reexamine that compromise) and makes the case for collective action and working class solidarity as the only way individuals can reclaim their limited time from the demands of capitalism. Swidler. wrote the
Monthly Review article
Radical Leisure.' --
This is Hell Radio
Published on June 17, 2016 05:26